Victoria Beckham And Other Celeb Mums Write Touching Open Letters To Their Children

Victoria Beckham has done something really unusual for a celebrity parent - she's opened up about her relationship with her children, and how she handles being a mother while being in the limelight.

Several famous mums, including Tina Knowles and Sharon Osbourne, have written poignant open letters to their children, which have been published in TIME magazine in the run up to American Mother's Day.

Beckham's letter touches on the struggle she has faced being a working mother and how she hopes she has set her children with a good example of what it's like to work hard.

The former Spice Girl and established fashion designer put pen to paper for her four children Brooklyn, 15, Romeo, 12, Cruz, nine, and Harper, three.

Beckham describes being a mother as "simply the greatest achievement of [her] life" and beams about the emotional connection she has with all four of her children.

The singer-turned-fashion designer talks about the importance of teaching her children to understand humility, and making sure they appreciate how to work hard, be respectful and never take things for granted.

"My mother and father always encouraged me and my siblings, to have ambitions, and I hope that I can do the same with my children," she adds.

Being high up in the fashion world, Beckham acknowledges the struggles she has faced as a working mother and how much she misses her children when she's away.

American politician Nikki Haley agrees, writing that her children have kept her grounded, made her laugh, and made her proud. While Wolfe admits that being a mother has completely changed her... for the better.

Other mums, including Ivana Trump, take pride in the fact that their children have done everything on their own.

She talks about her children Donald, 37, Ivanka, 33, and Eric, 31, doing their homework when they were younger, working summer jobs and saving income even while coming from a privileged house.

Unlike what we read about these mothers on the internet or in magazines,

Reading real accounts of these women's experiences of motherhood has shown us a different side of them to what we usually see in magazines.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, they're just the same as non-celebrity mums: They love their children, they miss their children, they're proud of them, too.